With respect to mentality, isn't it more reasonable to claim that, when we have an explanatory theory, whatever it is, mentality will be subject to physical laws just like everything else? — tom
In addition to the two previously mentioned, you would probably need to include at least Thermodynamics.
Is the notion that certain systems may be subject to laws, but not explicable by them so difficult to grasp? — tom
They have no extra-mental existence. We apply those concepts to extra-mental things. — numberjohnny5
If numbers, shapes and ideas have no extra-mental existence then what are the "extra-mental things" "we apply those concepts to"? — Janus
If I depend on someone for food does this not imply that they bring about (cause) the conditions in which I am fed? I can't see what correlation has to do with it. — Janus
Do you define features of experience as extra-mental then? — Janus
So the whole universe is an abstraction your view? I don't think that standpoint is going to be of much help. — Janus
On the other hand, if we say that some future, "ideal" physics is what is meant, then the claim is rather empty, for we have no idea of what this means. The "ideal" physics may even come to define what we think of as mental as part of the physical world. In effect, physicalism by this second account becomes the circular claim that all phenomena are explicable in terms of physics because physics properly defined is whatever explains all phenomena.
I'm sorry to say none of this makes any sense to me Michael. I've tried a few times to understand your metaphysics and failed every time. Perhaps I'm simply not intelligent enough for the task. :) — Janus
No I can understand the words and phrases; it how they all hang together to support your conclusions that I don't get — Janus
. In any case it's off-topic as far as I can tell.
We don't have to resort to imagining an ideal physics. We could instead imagine the possibilities of an embrace by physicists of arguments by scientists like Lee Smolen and Ilya Prigogone that the currently accepted physical description of reality is hampered by its reliance on a static model that sees time as a superfluous construct. — Joshs
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